Janet Wilson

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Born (1948-11-02) 2 November 1948 (age 77)
Citizenship
  • New Zealand
KnownforResearch and writing on Postcolonial studies
Janet Wilson
Born (1948-11-02) 2 November 1948 (age 77)
Citizenship
  • New Zealand
Known forResearch and writing on Postcolonial studies
SpouseKevin Ireland
Academic background
Alma materVictoria University of Wellington
University of Sydney
St Catherine's College, Oxford
ThesisAn edition of Roger Edgeworth's Sermons very fruitfull, godly and learned (from the 1557 edition and Bodl. MS Rawl. D. 831) (1985)
Doctoral advisorDouglas Gray, JRR Tolkien Professor of English Literature and Language, Lady Margaret Hall, OxfordLady Margaret Hall, Oxford
Academic work
DisciplineEnglish
InstitutionsUniversity of Northampton
Websitepure.northampton.ac.uk/en/persons/janet-wilson-3

Janet M. Wilson is a UK-based New Zealand academic who specialises in post colonial New Zealand literature.

Janet Mary Wilson is Emerita Professor of English and Postcolonial Studies, Faculty of Arts, Science and Technology, University of Northampton[1] and editor of the Journal of Postcolonial Writing[2] and on the board of the Journal of New Zealand Literature.[3]

Previous appointments were held at Birkbeck, University of London, University of Otago, Oxford Brookes University, University of Oxford, Trinity College Dublin, University of Auckland and University of Sydney.

Wilson was elected Vice President of the National Conference of University Professors in 2018 and became President in 2020 until 2022.[4]

Education

Professional life

Wilson currently holds a Visiting Professorship at Birmingham City University, is an Academic Visitor at University of Auckland and a Visiting Research Fellow at Rothermere American Institute University of Oxford where she was previously a Senior Research Fellow and an Associate Research Fellow. She was previously a Visiting Fellow at Jamia Millia Islamia University.

Awards and recognition

Wilson was a recipient of an Australian Commonwealth Fellowship at the University of Sydney (1972-1974) and a Violet Vaughan Morgan Studentship at St Catherine's College, Oxford (1980-1981).

Personal life

Wilson was, until his death, married to the New Zealand writer and poet Kevin Ireland.

Bibliography

References

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